- Joined
- Mar 11, 2008
- Messages
- 1,357
..... Stonefridge! 
Atop the flat landscape on the edge of Santa Fe, among tumbleweeds and trash and the beauty of northern New Mexico's skyline, "Stonefridge" catches your eye and confuses your mind like a mirage.
Refrigerators of all colors and shapes stand 18-feet high, lined up in a 100-foot diameter circle, facing inward toward a cluster of taller fridge towers. It's as if the outer ring of fridges is worshipping these inner towers, or perhaps protecting them from the outside dangers.
Like Stonehenge, which is aligned to solar and lunar astronomical events, "Stonefridge" is geographically aligned to its own kind of power source: Los Alamos National Laboratories. Adam Horowitz, a critic of the atomic bomb, purposefully built the monument in a place where visitors can see the labs in the distance. He calls it an "atomic alignment."
Atop the flat landscape on the edge of Santa Fe, among tumbleweeds and trash and the beauty of northern New Mexico's skyline, "Stonefridge" catches your eye and confuses your mind like a mirage.
Refrigerators of all colors and shapes stand 18-feet high, lined up in a 100-foot diameter circle, facing inward toward a cluster of taller fridge towers. It's as if the outer ring of fridges is worshipping these inner towers, or perhaps protecting them from the outside dangers.
Like Stonehenge, which is aligned to solar and lunar astronomical events, "Stonefridge" is geographically aligned to its own kind of power source: Los Alamos National Laboratories. Adam Horowitz, a critic of the atomic bomb, purposefully built the monument in a place where visitors can see the labs in the distance. He calls it an "atomic alignment."